Incidence and Trends of Infection with Pathogens Transmitted Commonly Through Food — Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 U.S. Sites, 2006–2013

Foodborne disease continues to be an important problem in the United States. Most illnesses are preventable. To evaluate progress toward prevention, the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) monitors the incidence of laboratory-confirmed infections caused by nine pathogens transmitted commonly through food in 10 U.S. sites, covering approximately 15% of the U.S. population. This report summarizes preliminary 2013 data and describes trends since 2006. In 2013, a total of 19,056 infections, 4,200 hospitalizations, and 80 deaths were reported. For most infections, incidence was well above national Healthy People 2020 incidence targets and highest among children aged <5 years. Compared with 2010-2012, the estimated incidence of infection in 2013 was lower for Salmonella, higher for Vibrio, and unchanged overall.† Since 2006-2008, the overall incidence has not changed significantly. More needs to be done. Reducing these infections requires actions targeted to sources and pathogens, such as continued use of Salmonella poultry performance standards and actions mandated by the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA). FoodNet provides federal and state public health and regulatory agencies as well as the food industry with important information needed to determine if regulations, guidelines, and safety practices applied across the farm-to-table continuum are working.

Foodborne disease continues to be an important problem in the United States.Most illnesses are preventable.To evaluate progress toward prevention, the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network* (FoodNet) monitors the incidence of laboratory-confirmed infections caused by nine pathogens transmitted commonly through food in 10 U.S. sites, covering approximately 15% of the U.S. population.This report summarizes preliminary 2013 data and describes trends since 2006.In 2013, a total of 19,056 infections, 4,200 hospitalizations, and 80 deaths were reported.For most infections, incidence was well above national Healthy People 2020 incidence targets and highest among children aged <5 years.Compared with 2010-2012, the estimated incidence of infection in 2013 was lower for Salmonella, higher for Vibrio, and unchanged overall.† Since 2006-2008, the overall incidence has not changed significantly.More needs to be done.Reducing these infections requires actions targeted to sources and pathogens, such as continued use of Salmonella poultry performance standards and actions mandated by the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) (1).FoodNet provides federal and state public health and regulatory agencies as well as the food industry with important information needed to determine if regulations, guidelines, and safety practices applied across the farm-to-table continuum are working.
FoodNet conducts active, population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed infections caused by Campylobacter, Cryptosporidium, Cyclospora, Listeria, Salmonella, Shiga toxinproducing Escherichia coli (STEC) O157 and non-O157, Shigella, Vibrio, and Yersinia in 10 sites covering approximately 15% of the U.S. population (an estimated 48 million persons in 2012).§ FoodNet is a collaboration among CDC, 10 state health departments, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA-FSIS), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).Hospitalizations occurring within 7 days of specimen collection are recorded, as is the patient's vital status at hospital discharge, or at 7 days after specimen collection if the patient was not hospitalized.Hospitalizations and deaths that occur within 7 days are attributed to the infection.Surveillance for physician-diagnosed postdiarrheal hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a complication of STEC infection characterized by renal failure, is conducted through a network of nephrologists and infection preventionists and by hospital discharge data review.This report includes 2012 HUS data for persons aged <18 years.
In addition to culture-confirmed infections (some with a positive CIDT result), there were 1,487 reports of positive CIDTs that were not confirmed by culture, either because the specimen was not cultured at either the clinical or public health laboratory or because a culture did not yield the pathogen.For 1,017 Campylobacter reports in this category, 430 (42%) had no culture, and 587 (58%) were culture-negative.For 247 STEC reports, 59 (24%) had no culture, and 188 (76%) were culture-negative.The Shiga toxin-positive result was confirmed for 65 (34%) of 192 broths sent to a public health laboratory.The other reports of positive CIDT tests not confirmed by culture were of Shigella (147), Salmonella (69), Vibrio (four), Listeria (two), and Yersinia (one).

Discussion
The incidence of laboratory-confirmed Salmonella infections was lower in 2013 than 2010-2012, whereas the incidence of Vibrio infections increased.No changes were observed for infection with Campylobacter, Listeria, STEC O157, or Yersinia, the other pathogens transmitted commonly through food for which Healthy People 2020 targets exist.The lack of recent progress toward these targets points to gaps in the current food safety system and the need for more food safety interventions.
Although the incidence of Salmonella infection in 2013 was lower than during 2010-2012, it was similar to 2006-2008, well above the national Healthy People target.Salmonella organisms live in the intestines of many animals and can be transmitted to humans through contaminated food or water or through  4), but about 50% of domestically acquired infections are transmitted through food, most commonly oysters (5).Foodborne infections can be prevented by postharvest treatment of oysters with heat, freezing, or high pressure, by thorough cooking, or by not eating oysters during warmer months (6).During the summers of 2012 and 2013, many V. parahaemolyticus infections of a strain previously traced only to the Pacific Northwest were associated with consumption of oysters and other shellfish from several Atlantic Coast harvest areas.¶ ¶ V. alginolyticus, the second most common Vibrio reported to FoodNet in 2013, typically causes wound and soft-tissue infections among persons who have contact with water (7).
The continued decrease in the incidence of postdiarrheal HUS has not been matched by a decline in STEC O157 infections.Possible explanations include unrecognized changes in surveillance, improvements in management of STEC O157 diarrhea, or an actual decrease in infections with the most  virulent strains of STEC O157.It is possible that more stool specimens are being tested for STEC, resulting in increased detection of milder infections than in the past.Continued surveillance is needed to determine if this pattern holds.CIDTs are increasingly used by clinical laboratories to diagnose bacterial enteric infections, a trend that will challenge the ability to identify cases, monitor trends, detect outbreaks, and characterize pathogens (8).Therefore, FoodNet began tracking CIDT-positive reports and surveying clinical laboratories about their diagnostic practices.The adoption of CIDTs has varied by pathogen and has been highest for STEC and Campylobacter.Positive CIDTs frequently cannot be confirmed by culture, and the positive predictive value varies by the CIDT used.For STEC, most specimens identified as Shiga toxin-positive were sent to a public health laboratory for confirmation.However, for other pathogens the fraction of specimens from patients with a positive CIDT sent for confirmation likely is low because no national guidelines regarding confirmation of CIDT results currently exist.As the number of approved CIDTs increases, their use likely will increase rapidly.Clinicians, clinical and public health laboratorians, public health practitioners, regulatory agencies, and industry must work together to maintain strong surveillance to detect dispersed outbreaks, measure the impact of prevention measures, and identify emerging threats.
The findings in this report are subject to at least five limitations.First, health-care-seeking behaviors and other characteristics of the population in the surveillance area might affect the generalizability of the findings.Second, some agents transmitted commonly through food (e.g., norovirus) are not monitored by FoodNet because clinical laboratories do not routinely test for them.Third, the proportion of illnesses transmitted by nonfood routes differs by pathogen; data provided in this report are not limited to infections from food.Fourth, in some fatal cases, infection with the enteric pathogen might not have been the primary cause of death.Finally, changes in incidence between periods can reflect year-to-year variation during those periods rather than sustained trends.
Most foodborne illnesses can be prevented, and progress has been made in decreasing contamination of some foods and reducing illness caused by some pathogens since 1996, Relative rate (log scale) Year when FoodNet began.More can be done; surveillance data provide information on where to target prevention efforts.
In 2011, USDA-FSIS tightened its performance standard for Salmonella contamination of whole broiler chickens; in 2013, 3.9% of samples tested positive (Christopher Aston, USDA-FSIS, Office of Data Integration and Food Protection; personal communication; 2014).Because most chicken is purchased as cut-up parts, USDA-FSIS conducted a nationwide survey of raw chicken parts in 2012 and calculated an estimated 24% prevalence of Salmonella (9).In 2013, USDA-FSIS released its Salmonella Action Plan that indicates that USDA-FSIS will conduct a risk assessment and develop performance standards for poultry parts during 2014, among other key activities (10).The Food Safety Modernization Act of 2011 gives FDA additional authority to regulate food facilities, establish standards for safe produce, recall contaminated foods, and oversee imported foods; it also calls on CDC to strengthen surveillance and outbreak response (1).For consumers, advice on safely buying, preparing, and storing foods prone to contamination is available online.

FIGURE 1 .
FIGURE 1.Estimated percentage change in incidence of culture-confirmed bacterial and laboratory-confirmed parasitic infections in 2013 compared with average annual incidence during 2010-2012, by pathogen -Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, United States

TABLE . Number of cases of culture-confirmed bacterial and laboratory-confirmed parasitic infection, hospitalizations, and deaths, by pathogen -Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, United States, 2013*
* Data for 2013 are preliminary.† Per 100,000 population.§ Healthy People 2020 objective targets for incidence of Campylobacter, Listeria, Salmonella, STEC O157, Vibrio, and Yersinia infections per 100,000 population.¶ No national health objective exists for these pathogens.